President Claudia Sheinbaum Celebrates 70th Anniversary of Women’s First Vote in Mexico · Global Voices
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7 Articles
TIJUANA, JULY 04, 2025. – Recognises Jesús Alejandro Ruiz Uribe, the conquest of the women who managed to vote for the first time in Mexico’s history on July 3, 1955. “70 Years later, Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo, succeeds in being for the first time in the history of our country, president of Mexico,” said Ruiz Uribe, federal delegate of Welfare Programs in Baja California. It was July 3, 1955, that women in Mexico funded for the first time in a fed…
On July 3, 1955, Mexican women voted for the first time in a federal election, after decades of struggle for political equality.This advance was made possible thanks to the suffragist movement, the voices of emerging feminism and all those known and anonymous women who demanded to be recognized as full citizens. 70 years from that time, their legacy remains valid in every vote and in every right that women today exercise in Mexico.
The governor of the state, María Eugenia Campos Galván, commemorated this Tuesday another anniversary of the women’s vote in Mexico, highlighting the historical value of this achievement and reaffirming her commitment to the active participation of women in public life. Through her social networks, the president recalled that it was July 3 when Mexican women first exercised their right to vote, thanks to the struggle of generations that opened t…
By Hugo Gama On 3 July, women's right to vote, the recognition of political rights, and their participation in democratic life were commemorated for the first time in Mexico in 1955. Women's struggle has been permanent and uninterrupted for decades, and in this case, it is of the greatest importance, given that women's power has chosen their people's representatives, from that moment on and through, they sought voices that would enable them to a…
On July 3, 2025, 70 years have been commemorated since Mexican women first exercised their right to vote in a federal election, a fact that marked a parteaguas in the democratic life of the country. Mexico's first and current president, Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo, recalled the date on her social networks, highlighting that this right was conquered thanks to the collective struggle of women who promoted the suffragist movement.
We celebrated seventy years of the women’s vote in Mexico, but how much did that help women’s rights? We tell you.
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